Noah Addis: Future Cities

Artist Bio

Noah Addis is a photographer based in Philadelphia. He began his career as a staff photojournalist for the Star-Ledger, a large daily newspaper in Newark, New Jersey.

He was awarded the New Jersey Photographer of the Year award three times and was the runner-up in the portfolio category of the National Press Photographer’s Association Best of Photojournalism contest.

Addis’ photographs have been published in major publications including The New York Times, Time, Newsweek,People, US News & World Report, The Financial Times, and Life’s Year in Pictures. His work has been featured in digital publications including Conscientious, Places Design Observer, Fraction Magazine, Aint-Bad, Fotografia Magazine,Vantage, Lens Culture and Flak Photo. Addis was recently was selected as one of Lens Culture’s Emerging Talents.

Future Cities

According to United Nations estimates, there are nearly a billion people living in slums and informal settlements–one out of every seven people on the planet. This number is expected to grow to three billion by the middle of the century. While informal communities may outwardly appear to be ruled by chaos and disorder, they are in fact very organized places that grow almost organically to suit the needs of the people who live in them.

For this series of photographs, I have traveled to cities throughout the world in which a significant percentage of the population lives in informal settlements. I have focused on the landscape and architecture of these homes and communities in order to show the creativity and resilience of the people who created them. Housing is a basic human need that we all share. I am interested in exploring the similarities and differences among self-built homes and settlements across the globe.

I have found informal communities to be extremely creative and vibrant places in which the architecture reflects the character of the community. The efficiency and the adaptive nature of these self-built communities makes them worthy of attention in order to see what can be learned from them about urban planning and sustainable development.

The world’s squatters exist in a legal vacuum, working outside of the official economy and living with only tenuous rights to the ground on which they have built their homes. City governments often choose to demolish these settlements in an attempt to impose order on the urban landscape. This approach frequently contributes to a cycle of poverty and decay. Residents have often told me they are less likely to invest in improving their homes and businesses if they are in constant fear of eviction.

People living in informal settlements have very specific needs, including a pathway to property ownership, access to credit and financial services, education for their children and basic services, such as clean water, sanitation and electricity. Many of these needs are not currently being met as cities struggle with ways to deal with a rapid influx of rural migrants. Yet strong evidence suggests that when these basic needs are met, these new urban settlements can grow into thriving communities.

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